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Turned liberal: Took down my wall. OOPS
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Jan 12, 2019 20:30:02   #
cbpat1
 
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locations all have in common, about high security places that have no walls, that I would put it to the test. I decided, that my backyard, with a six foot wooden wall, that I use as a barrier to keep my dogs safely secure, is r****t and needed to come down. So it took me all weekend, but, I took down my immoral wall, set up surveillance cameras, set up sonar, radar and a drone.

Next I slid open my sliding glass barrier from my house and let my three dogs, all Black Mouth Cur’s, into the backyard, to see how my new security system worked.

Well, before I knew it they were all about three houses down, running like hell, all in different directions. The surveillance cameras did absolutely nothing to stop them at all, I was shocked. The sonar failed and the radar was worthless as well. The drone hit a electric line and crashed and burned in my next door neighbors front yard.

My smallest dog, JB ran out in front of a car and got hit and had to be put down.

Maggie, my only female, bit the little boy down the street and now I am being sued.

Louie, the biggest male, got caught by the dog catcher and cost me $150.00 to get out of the doggie slammer.

All in all, I decided that walls really do work and put my six foot wooden wall back up in my back yard. Funny how in over twenty five years of having my six foot high wooden wall, I never had any of the several dogs we had in those many years ever get out of our back yard.

I think walls or fences or wh**ever you want to call them, really do work, and you would have to be pretty stupid to think they don’t.

Reply
Jan 12, 2019 20:34:40   #
no propaganda please Loc: moon orbiting the third rock from the sun
 
cbpat1 wrote:
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locations all have in common, about high security places that have no walls, that I would put it to the test. I decided, that my backyard, with a six foot wooden wall, that I use as a barrier to keep my dogs safely secure, is r****t and needed to come down. So it took me all weekend, but, I took down my immoral wall, set up surveillance cameras, set up sonar, radar and a drone.

Next I slid open my sliding glass barrier from my house and let my three dogs, all Black Mouth Cur’s, into the backyard, to see how my new security system worked.

Well, before I knew it they were all about three houses down, running like hell, all in different directions. The surveillance cameras did absolutely nothing to stop them at all, I was shocked. The sonar failed and the radar was worthless as well. The drone hit a electric line and crashed and burned in my next door neighbors front yard.

My smallest dog, JB ran out in front of a car and got hit and had to be put down.

Maggie, my only female, bit the little boy down the street and now I am being sued.

Louie, the biggest male, got caught by the dog catcher and cost me $150.00 to get out of the doggie slammer.

All in all, I decided that walls really do work and put my six foot wooden wall back up in my back yard. Funny how in over twenty five years of having my six foot high wooden wall, I never had any of the several dogs we had in those many years ever get out of our back yard.

I think walls or fences or wh**ever you want to call them, really do work, and you would have to be pretty stupid to think they don’t.
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locat... (show quote)


Love it!!

Reply
Jan 12, 2019 20:55:42   #
tbutkovich
 
cbpat1 wrote:
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locations all have in common, about high security places that have no walls, that I would put it to the test. I decided, that my backyard, with a six foot wooden wall, that I use as a barrier to keep my dogs safely secure, is r****t and needed to come down. So it took me all weekend, but, I took down my immoral wall, set up surveillance cameras, set up sonar, radar and a drone.

Next I slid open my sliding glass barrier from my house and let my three dogs, all Black Mouth Cur’s, into the backyard, to see how my new security system worked.

Well, before I knew it they were all about three houses down, running like hell, all in different directions. The surveillance cameras did absolutely nothing to stop them at all, I was shocked. The sonar failed and the radar was worthless as well. The drone hit a electric line and crashed and burned in my next door neighbors front yard.

My smallest dog, JB ran out in front of a car and got hit and had to be put down.

Maggie, my only female, bit the little boy down the street and now I am being sued.

Louie, the biggest male, got caught by the dog catcher and cost me $150.00 to get out of the doggie slammer.

All in all, I decided that walls really do work and put my six foot wooden wall back up in my back yard. Funny how in over twenty five years of having my six foot high wooden wall, I never had any of the several dogs we had in those many years ever get out of our back yard.

I think walls or fences or wh**ever you want to call them, really do work, and you would have to be pretty stupid to think they don’t.
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locat... (show quote)


Ain’t That The T***h!

Reply
 
 
Jan 12, 2019 21:07:00   #
sisboombaa
 
cbpat1 wrote:
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locations all have in common, about high security places that have no walls, that I would put it to the test. I decided, that my backyard, with a six foot wooden wall, that I use as a barrier to keep my dogs safely secure, is r****t and needed to come down. So it took me all weekend, but, I took down my immoral wall, set up surveillance cameras, set up sonar, radar and a drone.

Next I slid open my sliding glass barrier from my house and let my three dogs, all Black Mouth Cur’s, into the backyard, to see how my new security system worked.

Well, before I knew it they were all about three houses down, running like hell, all in different directions. The surveillance cameras did absolutely nothing to stop them at all, I was shocked. The sonar failed and the radar was worthless as well. The drone hit a electric line and crashed and burned in my next door neighbors front yard.

My smallest dog, JB ran out in front of a car and got hit and had to be put down.

Maggie, my only female, bit the little boy down the street and now I am being sued.

Louie, the biggest male, got caught by the dog catcher and cost me $150.00 to get out of the doggie slammer.

All in all, I decided that walls really do work and put my six foot wooden wall back up in my back yard. Funny how in over twenty five years of having my six foot high wooden wall, I never had any of the several dogs we had in those many years ever get out of our back yard.

I think walls or fences or wh**ever you want to call them, really do work, and you would have to be pretty stupid to think they don’t.
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locat... (show quote)


So sorry to hear of your failed experiment. Hope you learned a lessen which is never ever follow advice from Kevyn. One wonders how many other people have been led astray by Kevyn only to suffer. Perhaps the government should pass a law requiring that Kevyn be covered with warning labels.

Reply
Jan 12, 2019 21:26:49   #
debeda
 
cbpat1 wrote:
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locations all have in common, about high security places that have no walls, that I would put it to the test. I decided, that my backyard, with a six foot wooden wall, that I use as a barrier to keep my dogs safely secure, is r****t and needed to come down. So it took me all weekend, but, I took down my immoral wall, set up surveillance cameras, set up sonar, radar and a drone.

Next I slid open my sliding glass barrier from my house and let my three dogs, all Black Mouth Cur’s, into the backyard, to see how my new security system worked.

Well, before I knew it they were all about three houses down, running like hell, all in different directions. The surveillance cameras did absolutely nothing to stop them at all, I was shocked. The sonar failed and the radar was worthless as well. The drone hit a electric line and crashed and burned in my next door neighbors front yard.

My smallest dog, JB ran out in front of a car and got hit and had to be put down.

Maggie, my only female, bit the little boy down the street and now I am being sued.

Louie, the biggest male, got caught by the dog catcher and cost me $150.00 to get out of the doggie slammer.

All in all, I decided that walls really do work and put my six foot wooden wall back up in my back yard. Funny how in over twenty five years of having my six foot high wooden wall, I never had any of the several dogs we had in those many years ever get out of our back yard.

I think walls or fences or wh**ever you want to call them, really do work, and you would have to be pretty stupid to think they don’t.
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locat... (show quote)


GOOD (and amusing) ANALOGY

Reply
Jan 12, 2019 21:27:22   #
debeda
 
sisboombaa wrote:
So sorry to hear of your failed experiment. Hope you learned a lessen which is never ever follow advice from Kevyn. One wonders how many other people have been led astray by Kevyn only to suffer. Perhaps the government should pass a law requiring that Kevyn be covered with warning labels.


Lolololololololhahahahahaha

Reply
Jan 12, 2019 23:05:39   #
BBianch
 
Most undocumented immigrants in this country did not enter the U.S. at the Southern border.

And they didn't enter near the border town of McAllen, Texas, which the president visited Thursday during the 20th day of a partial government shutdown fought over constructing additional barriers on the Southern border.

When it comes to people in the country without proper documentation, the majority of them didn't cross the Mexican border at all. Most of them came to the United States legally — but then don't leave.

About 700,000 travelers to the United States overstayed their visas in fiscal 2017, the most recent year for which the Department of Homeland Security has published figures. DHS estimated that, as of Sept. 30, 2017, the end of that fiscal year, more than 600,000 of those travelers were still in the U.S.

During that same year, there were just 300,000 apprehensions along the Southern border, according to Customs and Border Protection — the lowest number since 1971.

Visa overstays have outnumbered people who enter the country illegally at the Southern border every year since 2007, according to a report by the Center for Migration Studies. The report's authors estimate that the number of total visa overstays was 600,000 more than the total number of border crossers and that in 2014, visa overstays accounted for two-thirds of all new undocumented immigrants.

Immigrants traveling through Mexico, of course, take up much of the public's attention on the issue of i*****l i*********n. And they do account for almost all people apprehended by CBP, which includes the Border Patrol. (Immigration and Customs Enforcement largely works in the interior of the country.)

Those caught by the U.S. government can apply for asylum if they can claim a credible fear that their lives would be in danger by returning to their home countries; some immigrants, in fact, turn themselves in to federal agents to do so.

"A growing percentage of border crossers in recent years have originated in the Northern Triangle states of Central America," wrote Robert Warren and Donald Kerwin of the Center for Migration Studies. "These migrants are fleeing pervasive violence, persecution and poverty, and a large number do not seek to evade arrest, but present themselves to border officials and request political asylum. Many are de facto refugees, not illegal border crossers," the authors wrote.

In 2017, the Border Patrol employed more than 19,000 agents, almost double the number in fiscal 2003. And the agency's budget grew from $263 million in 1990 to more $3.8 billion in 2016, according to the American Immigration Council. The budget for Customs and Border Protection — which includes the Border Patrol — has grown from $5.9 billion in 2003 to $13.2 billion in 2016.

At the same time, apprehensions at the Southern border have declined — from a high of more than 1.6 million in 2000 to just over 300,000 in 2017.

Does the wall deter crossings?

CBP data shows that the number of people that agents have caught has decreased across the board — not just in areas where the government constructed barriers.

Both the El Paso and Rio Grande sectors have physical barriers in place to prevent illegal crossings into the United States. Pedestrian fencing stretches to both sides of the city of El Paso in West Texas, with vehicle barriers along much of the rest of the New Mexico border. In south Texas, pedestrian fencing dots the area around McAllen and expands most of the way from there to the Gulf of Mexico.

The Tucson sector, which covers most of Arizona and is almost completely blocked by vehicle and pedestrian fencing, has seen a recent increase in apprehensions. In fiscal 2018, CBP caught about 52,000 people there, including an estimated 5,000 unaccompanied minors.

The sector of the Southwestern border with the fewest apprehensions, on the other hand, has almost no fencing. The Big Bend sector, starting in West Texas and extending about halfway down the state, is the largest individual sector guarded by CBP. The rough terrain of the mountain ranges and the Chihuahuan Desert make it a difficult place to cross. In fiscal 2018, CBP apprehended just 8,000 people there.

There is no southern border “crises” and an absence of any factual information supporting that claim.

Reply
 
 
Jan 12, 2019 23:13:16   #
pafret Loc: Northeast
 
BBianch wrote:
Most undocumented immigrants in this country did not enter the U.S. at the Southern border.

And they didn't enter near the border town of McAllen, Texas, which the president visited Thursday during the 20th day of a partial government shutdown fought over constructing additional barriers on the Southern border.

When it comes to people in the country without proper documentation, the majority of them didn't cross the Mexican border at all. Most of them came to the United States legally — but then don't leave.

About 700,000 travelers to the United States overstayed their visas in fiscal 2017, the most recent year for which the Department of Homeland Security has published figures. DHS estimated that, as of Sept. 30, 2017, the end of that fiscal year, more than 600,000 of those travelers were still in the U.S.

During that same year, there were just 300,000 apprehensions along the Southern border, according to Customs and Border Protection — the lowest number since 1971.

Visa overstays have outnumbered people who enter the country illegally at the Southern border every year since 2007, according to a report by the Center for Migration Studies. The report's authors estimate that the number of total visa overstays was 600,000 more than the total number of border crossers and that in 2014, visa overstays accounted for two-thirds of all new undocumented immigrants.

Immigrants traveling through Mexico, of course, take up much of the public's attention on the issue of i*****l i*********n. And they do account for almost all people apprehended by CBP, which includes the Border Patrol. (Immigration and Customs Enforcement largely works in the interior of the country.)

Those caught by the U.S. government can apply for asylum if they can claim a credible fear that their lives would be in danger by returning to their home countries; some immigrants, in fact, turn themselves in to federal agents to do so.

"A growing percentage of border crossers in recent years have originated in the Northern Triangle states of Central America," wrote Robert Warren and Donald Kerwin of the Center for Migration Studies. "These migrants are fleeing pervasive violence, persecution and poverty, and a large number do not seek to evade arrest, but present themselves to border officials and request political asylum. Many are de facto refugees, not illegal border crossers," the authors wrote.

In 2017, the Border Patrol employed more than 19,000 agents, almost double the number in fiscal 2003. And the agency's budget grew from $263 million in 1990 to more $3.8 billion in 2016, according to the American Immigration Council. The budget for Customs and Border Protection — which includes the Border Patrol — has grown from $5.9 billion in 2003 to $13.2 billion in 2016.

At the same time, apprehensions at the Southern border have declined — from a high of more than 1.6 million in 2000 to just over 300,000 in 2017.

Does the wall deter crossings?

CBP data shows that the number of people that agents have caught has decreased across the board — not just in areas where the government constructed barriers.

Both the El Paso and Rio Grande sectors have physical barriers in place to prevent illegal crossings into the United States. Pedestrian fencing stretches to both sides of the city of El Paso in West Texas, with vehicle barriers along much of the rest of the New Mexico border. In south Texas, pedestrian fencing dots the area around McAllen and expands most of the way from there to the Gulf of Mexico.

The Tucson sector, which covers most of Arizona and is almost completely blocked by vehicle and pedestrian fencing, has seen a recent increase in apprehensions. In fiscal 2018, CBP caught about 52,000 people there, including an estimated 5,000 unaccompanied minors.

The sector of the Southwestern border with the fewest apprehensions, on the other hand, has almost no fencing. The Big Bend sector, starting in West Texas and extending about halfway down the state, is the largest individual sector guarded by CBP. The rough terrain of the mountain ranges and the Chihuahuan Desert make it a difficult place to cross. In fiscal 2018, CBP apprehended just 8,000 people there.

There is no southern border “crises” and an absence of any factual information supporting that claim.
Most undocumented immigrants in this country did n... (show quote)



There are estimated to be thirty million i******s in this country. If you want to persist in this stupidity that they all arrived legally and over stayed their visas I have a bridge I want to sell you.

Reply
Jan 12, 2019 23:23:58   #
BBianch
 
Could you give me a source for your 30 million figure? and could we have a civil discussion without the name calling?

Reply
Jan 12, 2019 23:55:16   #
Hadenough
 
cbpat1 wrote:
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locations all have in common, about high security places that have no walls, that I would put it to the test. I decided, that my backyard, with a six foot wooden wall, that I use as a barrier to keep my dogs safely secure, is r****t and needed to come down. So it took me all weekend, but, I took down my immoral wall, set up surveillance cameras, set up sonar, radar and a drone.

Next I slid open my sliding glass barrier from my house and let my three dogs, all Black Mouth Cur’s, into the backyard, to see how my new security system worked.

Well, before I knew it they were all about three houses down, running like hell, all in different directions. The surveillance cameras did absolutely nothing to stop them at all, I was shocked. The sonar failed and the radar was worthless as well. The drone hit a electric line and crashed and burned in my next door neighbors front yard.

My smallest dog, JB ran out in front of a car and got hit and had to be put down.

Maggie, my only female, bit the little boy down the street and now I am being sued.

Louie, the biggest male, got caught by the dog catcher and cost me $150.00 to get out of the doggie slammer.

All in all, I decided that walls really do work and put my six foot wooden wall back up in my back yard. Funny how in over twenty five years of having my six foot high wooden wall, I never had any of the several dogs we had in those many years ever get out of our back yard.

I think walls or fences or wh**ever you want to call them, really do work, and you would have to be pretty stupid to think they don’t.
So after reading kevyns post on what certain locat... (show quote)


After reading your post I think we should try that experiment at all the zoo’s and prisons. I would pay to see that. Your post was too funny, thanks I needed that.

MAGA

Reply
Jan 13, 2019 00:02:01   #
Hadenough
 
pafret wrote:
There are estimated to be thirty million i******s in this country. If you want to persist in this stupidity that they all arrived legally and over stayed their visas I have a bridge I want to sell you.


Pafret,

Didn’t you know the 11 million illegal Mexicans are frequent flyers? That’s how they get their families up here, they use their miles for trips back and forth. They use the monetary assistance from the US taxpayers to go to Disneyland.

MAGA

Reply
 
 
Jan 13, 2019 00:06:20   #
debeda
 
BBianch wrote:
Most undocumented immigrants in this country did not enter the U.S. at the Southern border.

And they didn't enter near the border town of McAllen, Texas, which the president visited Thursday during the 20th day of a partial government shutdown fought over constructing additional barriers on the Southern border.

When it comes to people in the country without proper documentation, the majority of them didn't cross the Mexican border at all. Most of them came to the United States legally — but then don't leave.

About 700,000 travelers to the United States overstayed their visas in fiscal 2017, the most recent year for which the Department of Homeland Security has published figures. DHS estimated that, as of Sept. 30, 2017, the end of that fiscal year, more than 600,000 of those travelers were still in the U.S.

During that same year, there were just 300,000 apprehensions along the Southern border, according to Customs and Border Protection — the lowest number since 1971.

Visa overstays have outnumbered people who enter the country illegally at the Southern border every year since 2007, according to a report by the Center for Migration Studies. The report's authors estimate that the number of total visa overstays was 600,000 more than the total number of border crossers and that in 2014, visa overstays accounted for two-thirds of all new undocumented immigrants.

Immigrants traveling through Mexico, of course, take up much of the public's attention on the issue of i*****l i*********n. And they do account for almost all people apprehended by CBP, which includes the Border Patrol. (Immigration and Customs Enforcement largely works in the interior of the country.)

Those caught by the U.S. government can apply for asylum if they can claim a credible fear that their lives would be in danger by returning to their home countries; some immigrants, in fact, turn themselves in to federal agents to do so.

"A growing percentage of border crossers in recent years have originated in the Northern Triangle states of Central America," wrote Robert Warren and Donald Kerwin of the Center for Migration Studies. "These migrants are fleeing pervasive violence, persecution and poverty, and a large number do not seek to evade arrest, but present themselves to border officials and request political asylum. Many are de facto refugees, not illegal border crossers," the authors wrote.

In 2017, the Border Patrol employed more than 19,000 agents, almost double the number in fiscal 2003. And the agency's budget grew from $263 million in 1990 to more $3.8 billion in 2016, according to the American Immigration Council. The budget for Customs and Border Protection — which includes the Border Patrol — has grown from $5.9 billion in 2003 to $13.2 billion in 2016.

At the same time, apprehensions at the Southern border have declined — from a high of more than 1.6 million in 2000 to just over 300,000 in 2017.

Does the wall deter crossings?

CBP data shows that the number of people that agents have caught has decreased across the board — not just in areas where the government constructed barriers.

Both the El Paso and Rio Grande sectors have physical barriers in place to prevent illegal crossings into the United States. Pedestrian fencing stretches to both sides of the city of El Paso in West Texas, with vehicle barriers along much of the rest of the New Mexico border. In south Texas, pedestrian fencing dots the area around McAllen and expands most of the way from there to the Gulf of Mexico.

The Tucson sector, which covers most of Arizona and is almost completely blocked by vehicle and pedestrian fencing, has seen a recent increase in apprehensions. In fiscal 2018, CBP caught about 52,000 people there, including an estimated 5,000 unaccompanied minors.

The sector of the Southwestern border with the fewest apprehensions, on the other hand, has almost no fencing. The Big Bend sector, starting in West Texas and extending about halfway down the state, is the largest individual sector guarded by CBP. The rough terrain of the mountain ranges and the Chihuahuan Desert make it a difficult place to cross. In fiscal 2018, CBP apprehended just 8,000 people there.

There is no southern border “crises” and an absence of any factual information supporting that claim.
Most undocumented immigrants in this country did n... (show quote)


Thanks for the dem talking points. Saves me from having to watch CNN. They're all wrong and/or distorted of course

Reply
Jan 13, 2019 00:07:27   #
debeda
 
Hadenough wrote:
Pafret,

Didn’t you know the 11 million illegal Mexicans are frequent flyers? That’s how they get their families up here, they use their miles for trips back and forth. They use the monetary assistance from the US taxpayers to go to Disneyland.

MAGA


Lolololololololhahahahahaha leave it to you, hadenough

Reply
Jan 13, 2019 00:08:30   #
Shavis Irons Loc: Central California
 
A good piece, Bianch! Clearly, the problem or solution is more complex than just a wall. Our bloated government agencies failed and have not been held accountable; we're left with having to make the best of an unfixable situation... not all will be happy!

https://youtu.be/2QOwAJ2ez6U

Reply
Jan 13, 2019 01:32:39   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
Democrat v**ers!!! They r against the wall!!! More democrat v**ers! Hillary’s team!!!

Reply
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